This exhibit on the fourth floor of the Ukrainian Institute of America’s historic 19th century townhouse at 2 E. 79th St. and 5th Ave showcases several of the largest and most beautiful works from the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady collection of Ukrainian realist and socialist realist paintings of the 1950s-1980s. Two rooms on the Institute’s fourth floor hold a dozen museum-quality paintings by leading artists based in Ukraine in the Soviet era. The works include Mikhailo Khmelko’s Motherland Greets a Hero (1961, oil on canvas. 201 x 464 cm.), depicting the first man in space, Yuri Gagarin; Anatoli Nasedkin’s Land. (1982, oil on canvas. 200 x 180 cm.), an iconic image of peasants, and Vladimir Kuznetsov’s Before the Shift, (1960, oil on canvas. 200 x 290 cm.), an image of tractor factory workers dancing and talking before their work shift. The Ukrainian Institute of America’s exhibits are open from Tuesday-Saturday, noon to 6 pm (www.ukrainianinstitute.org)

More than 300 people attended the opening of Ukrainian Socialist Realism on Sept. 14. (For a video of the opening, go to http://vimeo.com/50723536). The inaugural exhibition of more than 40 works from the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection marked the first time the realist and socialist paintings, which span the 1950s-1980s, have been seen by the public outside of Ukraine.

Ukrainian Socialist Realism examined the evolution of the official Soviet art genre in Ukraine in the post-Stalin-period. While painters continued to face censorship and the ideological strictures of the Communist Party’s officially-sanctioned style, some began testing the system by introducing more Ukrainian national cultural images into their works, or presenting a darker side of Soviet Ukrainian reality. The Ukrainian Institute’s Art Director, Walter Hoydysh, Ph.D., was curator of the show. Visiting co-curator was Olena Martynyuk, a Ph.D. candidate in art history at Rutgers University. (See a pdf of Ms. Martynyuk’s essay written for the exhibition catalog.)

Maniichuk assembled his collection, which includes over 140 paintings, while working in Kyiv in the mid-1990s. Born in 1955 in Lviv, Ukraine, he graduated with a Ph.D. from Kyiv State University and was a professor of international law before emigrating in the late 1980s. He became an American citizen in the early 1990s, returning to Kyiv as a legal consultant to the government two years after Ukraine attained its independence.. Maniichuk collected Ukrainian art at a time of great economic uncertainty, when artists were so short of resources they painted new works over old canvases.

As part of the exhibition, the Ukrainian Institute of America also hosted a symposium, “Ukrainian Socialist Realism: Propaganda or Art?” More than 100 people attended the event on Sept. 16, which featured three experts on Ukrainian art: Lyudmyla Lysenko, senior lecturer in art history at the Ukrainian Academy of Art and Architecture in Kyiv; Hilary Zarycky, painter, art director, and graphic designer in New York; and Alexander Motyl, writer, painter, and professor of political science, Rutgers University-Newark. (See Motyl’s article about the exhibition and symposium: http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/blog/alexander-j-motyl/seeing-ukrainian-socialist-realism).

Ukrainian Socialist Realism was in memory of Maniichuk, who died unexpectedly while visiting Kyiv in 2009. Since his death, the collection is owned and administered by his wife, Rose Brady. Some 50 paintings from the Maniichuk-Brady collection will be on view, on a rotating basis, on the fourth floor of the Ukrainian Institute of America until 2018. For more information, contact the Ukrainian Institute of America (www.ukrainianinstitute.org). For articles about the exhibition in the Russian language, see this PDF and http://newswe.com/index.php?go=Pages&in=view&id=5268.

Two Ivans and Oksana by Voila Pushkarova, a painting from the Jurii Maniichuk and Rose Brady Collection, is part of the Brooklyn Museums’ installation, Russian Modern, in the European painting galleries. It has been on long-term view since September 28, 2011. The installation of thirteen rarely seen paintings from the collection of the Brooklyn Museum and the Maniichuk- Brady collection explores the impact and influence of Russian and former Soviet artists on modern European painting. Ukrainian artist Pushkarova painted her work (oil on canvas, 165.4 x 109.2 cm.) in 1964, shortly after graduating from the state-run Kharkiv Art Institute in Ukraine. She died in 2010 in Ukraine. Maniichuk acquired the painting from the artist in the 1990s, while assembling his collection of close to 150 paintings of Ukrainian realist and socialist realist art.

Russian Modern also features masterworks by such pioneering artists as Ilya Bolotowsky, Boris Anisfeld, Boris Gigoriev, Wassily Kandinsky, Vasily Vereshchagin, and Aleksandr Yakovlev. For more information, see www.brooklynmuseum.org. For an article in Russian about the installation, go to http://reporterru.com/?p=14353.